They constantly assume he played football in high school, but that seems to be based on image more than reality. I think he mentioned in his voiceover/diary that he wished he hadn't dropped out of high school.
They constantly assume he played football in high school, but that seems to be based on image more than reality. I think he mentioned in his voiceover/diary that he wished he hadn't dropped out of high school.
If it's music the characters are listening to, it sticks to the timeline. That rule doesn't apply for music over montages or closing credits.
Yes. I didn't find the proposal to Megan believable, and I spent the rest of the episode waiting for it to turn out to be a dream. I know that the whole season was building up to that, but I just didn't believe it. Especially since it was similar to how Betty and Henry got engaged the season before. Sure, people…
I agree. I think that Tomorrowland just didn't work, and it's the worst episode of the series.
I'm still pissed off that there were no commentaries for season 6!
Yes, it shocks me how much it never happened.
I'd vote for The End of the World at the end of The Grown Ups.
Yes! Nothing kills a show faster for me than a will-they-or-won't-they storyline that lasts more than a couple of months.
Yes, but I wouldn't say her initial motivation for criticizing the girl was to get Ken a date.
I think VK said that on the commentary track for this episode.
Duck's fart just as he's about to shit on Roger's chair in "The Suitcase".
Right. Grandpa Gene or Baby Gene? Or did they mean Glen. In which case…Sally and Glen? Really?
The stepmother was pregnant with Adam in the flashback when they first came to the brothel. Still, it would have been helpful to have seen Adam in other flashbacks in order to indicate what age Dick was supposed to be in certain scenes. The fact that they used the same actor as Dick as they used in season one caused…
I remember him mentioning that he had a daughter who is having "trouble finding a beau".
I don't think that was ever clarified. I assumed that after he left the real Don Draper's body with his family at the train station in Pennsylvania, he stayed on the train until NYC, and Anna tracked him down there, but I've seen other people assume the dealership was in California.
They're generally good at continuity within the show's timeframe, but the timeline of the Dick Whitman backstory has never made sense.
Not only that, but the copywriter who replaced Peggy (the woman, who was fired after the SCDP/CGC merger) was named Margie. For some reason, in this show, all the female copywriters are named a version Margaret. WHAT CAN IT MEAN?